"President Trump will "provide an update on the path forward for America’s engagement in Afghanistan and South Asia" at 9 p.m. ET, the White House said. The president is scheduled to speak from Fort Myer in Arlington, Virginia."
This
will be the president's first televised address to the nation and for
that reason alone, apart from the significance of a major policy move on
America's longest war, there are major ramifications as regards the
nature, credibility and importance of the main stream media.
The
media's relationship to the Trump administration is succinctly summed
up in, of all places, The San Francisco chronicle, where opinion writer Rubin Navarette Jr. advises;
"Americans are fed precooked narratives by the Fourth Estate. We’re told what’s important and what isn’t, what to focus on and what to ignore, and — above all — what to think.Last week’s serving was that Trump is providing aid and comfort to a loathsome bunch of misfits — neo-Nazis, Klansmen and white supremacists.
"Americans are fed precooked narratives by the Fourth Estate. We’re told what’s important and what isn’t, what to focus on and what to ignore, and — above all — what to think.Last week’s serving was that Trump is providing aid and comfort to a loathsome bunch of misfits — neo-Nazis, Klansmen and white supremacists.
Nevertheless, for my money, the more important takeaway
from that
no-holds-barred presser was that we have entered scary and uncharted
territory in the relationship between the president and the media. It’s
very personal.
And yet, at the same time, Trump is right to complain about how he never gets any credit for doing the right thing because the media and the rest of his critics are always waiting to pounce on him for doing the wrong thing.
And yet, at the same time, Trump is right to complain about how he never gets any credit for doing the right thing because the media and the rest of his critics are always waiting to pounce on him for doing the wrong thing.
All I could think was: The media have lost their collective mind.
They used to be content to just tell us what to think. Now, in the era
of Trump, they go further and tell us not to trust what we see with our
own eyes or hear with our own ears."
This
is of course indisputably, sadly true. The media on the other hand
keeps to its pretense that it is a dispassionate, balanced body of
public servants which fabrication is preposterous given the absolute
fact that the majority of journalists are liberals.
The
president's announcement on Afghanistan is a big deal. Not only is is
of vital consideration given America's so far futile, never-ending
commitment to a war in a country that has seen of every such attempt to
impose a martial solution or to colonize fail, but it also will be the
final closure on the American media as journalism rather than as overt
partisanship.
Whatever
President Trump proposes regarding Afghanistan may end up in the
history books as the right option or the wrong one, but his proposals
obviously merit serious analysis in a non-partisan manner-after all,
American and Afghan lives are at risk.
If
the media, and especially those in the forefront of the anti-Trump
conflict such as MSNBC and CNN and the likes of Anderson Cooper, Jim
Acosta et al simply use whatever Trump proposes as a further opportunity
to, as Navarette said 'wrestle in the mud with Trump" then whatever
credibility the MSM has will be concluded.
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